Published in the Nov. 3, 2010, issue

A national assessment of doctoral programs released Sept. 28 ranked Princeton as a leader in graduate education, but the complexity of the findings makes it difficult to say who is the best in a given field.
The National Research Council gathered...Read more

Published in the Nov. 3, 2010, issue

Each December, David Loevner ’76 and a few colleagues from the selection committee of the Daniel M. Sachs Class of 1960 Scholarship notify one Princeton senior that he or she will be traveling abroad after graduation. After sharing that happy news, Loevner...Read more

Published in the Nov. 3, 2010, issue

The incoming class of graduate students is Princeton’s biggest ever, but the ­graduate school had mixed results in attracting students in underrepresented groups.
For women in science and engineering, the school reported the highest number of applicants...Read more

Published in the Nov. 3, 2010, issue

Oil and methane that leaked into the Gulf of Mexico following the Deepwater Horizon blowout could form deep LOW-OXYGEN “DEAD ZONES” near the spill’s source with oxygen depletion peaking in October, according to simulations from researchers at Princeton and...Read more

Julian E. Zelizer takes an early historical look at George W. Bush and re-evaluates Jimmy Carter

Published in the Nov. 3, 2010, issue

Former President George W. Bush was not “an accident or a lightweight,” but rather a politically savvy operator who put a substantial conservative agenda into place. That’s the view of history and public affairs professor Julian E. Zelizer, who has taken...Read more

Faculty portraits from the dawn of photography

Published in the Nov. 3, 2010, issue

What: Key members of the Princeton faculty – which was greatly enlarged by President James Carnahan 1800, top center – stare out from a haunting daguerreotype made shortly before he retired in 1854.
Tall, dignified, and dull, Carnahan nearly became the...Read more